Introduction, Kristin Roth-Ey (University College London,
UK)
1. The School: Integrating North Korean children within socialist
Eastern Europe, 1951-1959, Péter Apor (Hungarian Academy of
Sciences, Hungary)
2. The Airwaves: How Do You Listen to Radio Moscow? Moscow’s
Broadcasters, ‘Third World’ Listeners, and the Space of the
Airwaves in the Cold War, Kristin Roth-Ey (University College
London, UK)
3. The Great Industrial Project: Space, Sovereignty, and Production
Cultures at Egypt’s Aswan High Dam, Elizabeth Bishop (Texas State
University, USA)
4. The Exhibition: Spaces of Cultural Encounters, Radina Vucetic
(University of Belgrade, Serbia)
5. The Epistolarium: Socialist Internationalism Writ Small:
Friendship, Solidarity and Support between Women in the Soviet
Union and in Decolonising Countries, 1950s-1960s, Christine
Varga-Harris (Illinois State University, USA)
6. The University. The Decolonisation of Knowledge?: The Making of
the African University, the Power of the Imperial Legacy, and the
Eastern European Influence, Malgorzata Mazurek (Columbia
University, USA)
7. The Expert Community: Expert Knowledge and Socialist Virtues-
Czechoslovak Military Specialists in the Global South, Mikuláš
Pešta (Charles University Prague, Czech Republic)
8. The Military Training Camp: Experiences of PAIGC guerrillas in
Soviet Training Camps, 1961-1974, Natasha Telepneva (University of
Strathclyde, UK)
9. The Hospital: Romania’s “One Nation Hospital” in Gharyan,
1974-1985, Bogdan C. Iacob (Institute of History Bucharest,
Romania)
10. The Trade Union: Kindred by choice. Trade unions as interface
between East Africa and East Germany, Eric Burton (University of
Innsbruck, Austria)
11. The Everyday Space: The hostel, the pub, and the prison:
Vietnamese and Cuban Workers in 1980s Czechoslovakia, Alena K.
Alamgir (Georgia Institute of Technology, USA)
12. The Travelogue. Imagining Spaces of Encounter: Travel Writing
Between the Colonial and the Anti-Colonial in Socialist Eastern
Europe, 1949-1989, Eric Burton, Zoltán Ginelli, James Mark, and
Nemanja Radonjic (University of Innsbruck, Austria, National
University of Public Service Budapest, Hungary, University of
Exeter, UK )
Bibliography
Index
A study into the spaces of ‘Second-Third World’ interactions during the Cold War to understand the complex social, cultural and political encounters between Second World countries and the Global South.
Kristin Roth-Ey is Associate Professor of Modern Russian History at the UCL School of Slavonic and Eastern European Studies, UK. She is the author of Moscow Prime Time: How the Soviet Union Built the Media Empire that Lost of the Cultural Cold War (2011). Her current research focuses on Soviet media and cultural diplomacy in the Third World during the Cold War.
This impressive new project sheds the tired binaries as it seeks to
complicate the story of cold war encounters between the Second and
Third worlds. I particularly appreciate the emphasis on cultural
and social history through the exploration of the spaces that often
remained unseen and unexamined, but which were in fact the sites of
real human-to-human encounters. The contributors’ attention to the
mundane and the granular represents a welcome departure from the
standard grand narratives of the Cold War.
*Maxim Matusevich, Department of History, Seton Hall University,
USA*
This brilliantly edited volume invites readers right into the
military units, work sites, dorm rooms, and other tense spaces
where socialist internationalism unfolded, revealing a welter of
unexpected consequences: Korean orphans studying Czech folk songs,
Polish faculty teaching British economic theory to Ghanaian
university students, Romanian women seeking abortions in Libya, and
more.
*Margaret Litvin, Associate Professor of Arabic and Comparative
Literature, Boston University, USA*
The volume is an outstanding contribution to the literature on
global socialism, revisiting topics and questions that have for the
most part been treated before, but doing it with proficiency and
from an angle that is both refreshing and inspiring.
*CEU Review of Books*
[These] were spaces populated by socialist elites who belonged to
an international socialist cosmopolitan cadre. But did these spaces
find resonance at the level of the everyday, in the life of the
‘ordinary’ socialist citizen? And if so, how? Such questions are
likely to underpin further investigations within this field,
efforts that will be indebted to volumes such as this.
*Slavonic & East European Review*
A captivating and multifaceted read. It deftly dismantles the
limitations of the binary Cold War paradigm and reveals that the
geopolitical chessboard is much more complex and vaster than
previously thought. The book is undoubtedly essential for scholars
and enthusiasts of this historical period, but it also extends an
invitation to a wider audience.
*Journal of East Central European Studies*
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